"other scales"
An example of something which someone might use is a Likert scale, so that might be something like Strongly Disagree, Disagree, Neutral, Agree, and Strongly Agree. There are other kinds of scales though.
Given Mozilla's financial state, this is not a surprising decision.
Remember that there is qualitative and quantitative research.
Quantitative research involves collecting numerical data (things like yes / no and other scales can be encoded as numbers), often from large groups of people, and analysing that to figure out what the various variables describe.
Qualitative research delves into more subjective experiences in things like interviews (and textual data) and they involve smaller groups of people (analysing the data requires more resources which makes it harder to carry out studies with larger groups of people).
Mixed methods research does both.
That's a brief summary.
"Mozilla is going to be more active in digital advertising."
"we do this fully acknowledging our expanded focus on online advertising won’t be embraced by everyone in our community" - https://blog.mozilla.org/en/mozilla/improving-online-advertising/
I appreciate Mozilla laying their intent out explicitly with no room for interpretation or guesswork.
Personally, I think this is not just a huge misstep, but a deathknell.
Jeanne also makes an error here about why things might happen. It is a *political* issue. It is not a *scientific* issue. Going back a decade, there is more than enough grounds to show that it does not drive crime. This is a *political argument*. While more science might be helpful, it doesn't necessarily change the politics.
I suppose it is time for someone to bust out the Anki and those other tools to learn an extra language or two to take advantage of the new functionality.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/382465676_Reported_Consequences_of_the_Ban_on_Sex_Dolls_With_a_Childlike_Appearance_-_A_Content_Analysis_of_Affected_Persons'_Reports
Unsurprisingly, if a party with a name like the Party of Jesus Christ gets elected (what happened to keeping religion out of politics?), you might get morality based policies which are not based in science and violate human rights (although, "won't anyone please think of the children?"* would not be new rhetoric from politicians). Curiously, this country happens to have a branch of the notorious white savior fundamentalist group, IJM, and they come up more often than you'd think.
I haven't looked into this particular law though, so I don't know how it works in practice. I'm going by what Jeanne is saying here. Jeanne makes it sound disturbingly broad.
I haven't looked deeply into this but this feels like a likely forensic adjacent group (especially with the emphasis on whether it increases or decreases crime, and the author being a student in a forensic field), rather than a more representative sample which better represents the general population. Also, I don't think a representative sample (though that is one example she picked out) would use that identity. It concludes that the dolls reduce crime though.
https://qoto.org/@olives/113204617130506428 For my science based piece on such things (among other things like porn), there is this post.
@freemo https://git.qoto.org/explore There appear to be spammers on your Gitlab.
@freemo https://github.com/statping/statping Since the server seems to have eaten this post, I don't know if it reached you. Have you considered using some sort of status page (on a separate sub-domain?)? Here's an example of one.
https://www.ohchr.org/en/what-are-human-rights
"Human rights are rights we have simply because we exist as human beings - they are not granted by any state. These universal rights are inherent to us all, regardless of nationality, sex, national or ethnic origin, color, religion, language, or any other status. They range from the most fundamental - the right to life - to those that make life worth living, such as the rights to food, education, work, health, and liberty."
#HumanRights
"What do you think of so-called anime localizers?"
Well, remember that the area has had it's fair share of bad localizers. For instance, 4kids didn't really respect it as a cultural export, but as something they could change in whatever way they wanted to create their own highly opinionated products. So, they might take a more romantic story and awkwardly turn it into an "edgy" one (i.e. Cardcaptor Sakura, they also hated the idea of a girl being in love with a girl in it).
They also hated the idea that someone might eat any food that isn't stereotypically American. In one title, they decided to add in the American national anthem, and not only was it racist and imperialistic to do that, it was also cringeworthy. They were so bad that they were practically a meme, I think they went bankrupt in the end.
Also, many of these titles are not really "for kids", but 4kids would insist on adapting it anyway in that way. And honestly, even kids should be able to deal with the concept of there being more than one country out there in the world. It's also ironic that guns were censored in America of all places in one.
At some point, it was assumed that bad localizers would go away, because it is clear that no one likes what they do, but it seems there were a few cringe localizers who brag about inserting things like crude slang on social media.
Software Engineer. Psy / Tech / Sex Science Enthusiast. Controversial?
Free Expression. Human rights / Civil Liberties. Anime. Liberal.